Stars: 3 out of 5
Pros: The music; the second half
Cons: More cringes than laughs, especially in the first
half.
The Bottom Line:
More A Cappella
Mixed with jokes that make me cringe
Mostly mindless film
More A Capella Antics
Sometimes, I have a short memory. When I watched Pitch Perfect a couple of years back, I wasn’t as impressed as I
hoped I would be, so I had decided to give the sequel a pass. But with the third coming out, I stumbled on
the second on TV recently, so I recorded it.
Watching Pitch Perfect 2, I
remember my complaints with the original.
Yet, somehow, I found myself drawn in by the end.
As this movie opens, we join the Barden Bellas on a night of
great triumph. They are performing at
the Kennedy Center for the President as part of their celebration tour for
their third national A Capella title.
However, when Fat Amy (Rebel Wilson) is lowered down from the ceiling,
something goes horribly wrong, and the group is embarrassed.
Unfortunately, that isn’t the end of their
embarrassment. They are forbidden to
perform any more. They can’t even hold
any auditions to recruit new members.
Their only hope is to win an international competition they are
automatically entered into because they are the current U.S. college champs. But no team from the United States has ever
won. Can the Bellas do it? Or will this event mark their swan song?
So I know this is a light comedy, but I do have to get one
complaint out of the way first. Just
about everyone we’ve met in the first movie is still here in college, which is
fine, but the group is all now seniors and they’ve recruited no new
members? And they are worried about the
group continuing on? Maybe you should
have some younger members already. Just
saying. Oh, they do pick up one new
member thanks to a loophole, but is that really going to be enough to keep the
group going after everyone graduates?
Okay, on to some of my more serious complaints. The first half of the movie consists of the
characters, especially Fat Amy, making fools of themselves. Since I don’t like that kind of humor, it is
painful to watch. And yes, some of it
gets crude at times. And don’t get me
started on the commentators of the A Cappella events. The movie would be so much better without
John Michel Higgins and Elizabeth Banks’s supporting characters at all.
Somewhere along the line, the tone of the movie shifts, and
I started to like it. It happens as we
start to get to know the characters again and are actually given things and
people to root for. If they’d made the
characters more human from the beginning, I think I would have enjoyed it more.
The plot? It’s
nothing too surprising, to be honest.
But this is a case where I don’t mind too much since the movie never
pretended to be anything too original.
It’s just a light, mindless comedy, which is all it is wanting to be.
And yes, there’s plenty of A Cappella music, which is
another draw for me. Even when the songs
are a style I normally don’t like, I still enjoyed listening to it because of
the harmonies. We get cameos (and I do mean cameos) by a couple of real A Cappella groups in this movie, including super group Pentatonix. And yes, those really were Green Bay Packers doing their own singing in one scene.
So far, I’ve only managed to mention actors and characters
I’m not a fan of. (Rebel Wilson’s
characters always grate on me. I’m ready
for her to pick a different character to play.)
Much of the action does still center around Anna Kendrick’s Beca, who
gets a music internship in this movie that adds a nice sub-plot to things. Most of the ladies in the Bellas only get a
scene or two to truly stand out, but they make the most of them, and these
supporting players get some of the funnier moments in the film, too.
While Pitch Perfect 2
will never be one of my favorite films, I’m ultimate glad I watched it. I just wish the franchise found a better way
to make us laugh for the entire length of the film.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for stopping by. In order to combat spam, I moderate most comments. I'll get to your comment as soon as I can.